tpm2_policynvwritten(1) | General Commands Manual | tpm2_policynvwritten(1) |
tpm2_policynvwritten(1) - Restrict TPM object authorization to the written state of an NV index.
tpm2_policynvwritten [OPTIONS] [ARGUMENT]
tpm2_policynvwritten(1) - Restricts TPM object authorization to the written state of an NV index. Useful when creating write once NV indexes.
As an [ARGUMENT] it takes the expected written state of the NV index. It can be specified as s|c|0|1.
A session file from tpm2_startauthsession(1)’s -S option.
File to save the policy digest.
This collection of options are common to many programs and provide information that many users may expect.
To successfully use the manpages feature requires the manpages to be installed or on MANPATH, See man(1) for more details.
The TCTI or “Transmission Interface” is the communication mechanism with the TPM. TCTIs can be changed for communication with TPMs across different mediums.
To control the TCTI, the tools respect:
Note: The command line option always overrides the environment variable.
The current known TCTIs are:
The arguments to either the command line option or the environment variable are in the form:
<tcti-name>:<tcti-option-config>
Specifying an empty string for either the <tcti-name> or <tcti-option-config> results in the default being used for that portion respectively.
When a TCTI is not specified, the default TCTI is searched for using dlopen(3) semantics. The tools will search for tabrmd, device and mssim TCTIs IN THAT ORDER and USE THE FIRST ONE FOUND. You can query what TCTI will be chosen as the default by using the -v option to print the version information. The “default-tcti” key-value pair will indicate which of the aforementioned TCTIs is the default.
Any TCTI that implements the dynamic TCTI interface can be loaded. The tools internally use dlopen(3), and the raw tcti-name value is used for the lookup. Thus, this could be a path to the shared library, or a library name as understood by dlopen(3) semantics.
This collection of options are used to configure the various known TCTI modules available:
Example: -T device:/dev/tpm0 or export TPM2TOOLS_TCTI=“device:/dev/tpm0”
Example: -T mssim:host=localhost,port=2321 or export TPM2TOOLS_TCTI=“mssim:host=localhost,port=2321”
Specify the tabrmd tcti name and a config string of bus_name=com.example.FooBar:
\--tcti=tabrmd:bus_name=com.example.FooBar
Specify the default (abrmd) tcti and a config string of bus_type=session:
\--tcti:bus_type=session
NOTE: abrmd and tabrmd are synonymous. the various known TCTI modules.
Create a write once NV index. To do this the NV index is defined with a write policy that is valid only if the NV index attribute “TPMA_NV_WRITTEN” was never set.
tpm2_startauthsession -S session.dat tpm2_policycommandcode -S session.dat TPM2_CC_NV_Write tpm2_policynvwritten -S session.dat -L nvwrite.policy c tpm2_flushcontext session.dat
tpm2_nvdefine -s 1 -a "authread|policywrite" -p nvrdpass -L nvwrite.policy
tpm2_startauthsession -S session.dat --policy-session tpm2_policycommandcode -S session.dat TPM2_CC_NV_Write tpm2_policynvwritten -S session.dat c echo 0xAA | xxd -r -p | tpm2_nvwrite 0x01000000 -i- -P session:session.dat tpm2_flushcontext session.dat
Tools can return any of the following codes:
It expects a session to be already established via tpm2_startauthsession(1) and requires one of the following:
Without it, most resource managers will not save session state between command invocations.
Github Issues (https://github.com/tpm2-software/tpm2-tools/issues)
See the Mailing List (https://lists.01.org/mailman/listinfo/tpm2)
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